Thunder Bolt
Silly old bat
You posted / re-published it on here. The tweet is misleading and you've re-posted misleading information to score a political point.
Please provide the detail to show it is misleading.
You posted / re-published it on here. The tweet is misleading and you've re-posted misleading information to score a political point.
I put up two links. One showed that the cost of drugs is 2.5 times the cost of drugs in the US. That's talking about total cost - there may well be some drugs that are cheaper elsewhere (and as the OECD report shows there are European countries that are cheaper than the UK too)
And to quote from the CNN story (clearly not a far left news source) "A common complaint of the US pharmaceutical lobby is that other nations, including the United Kingdom, have strict regulatory systems and arrangements where governments subsidize medicine development that they believe keeps the price of drugs artificially low. This, they claim, makes it very hard for US companies to compete.
The UK system for valuing medicines is particularly complicated. It looks at the clinical effectiveness of a drug, and the bang for buck value of each medicine. It also takes into consideration input from drug companies before determining what it believes is a fair price.
The United States has publicly declared that it would demand not only that its companies have "full market access" to the United Kingdom, but also that "government regulatory reimbursement regimes are transparent." That would likely mean a provision allowing US drug companies to have a greater say in how the United Kingdom values medicines for the NHS, similar to one included in the US trade deal with South Korea last year."
Please provide the detail to show it is misleading.
I thinks that things cannot continue as they are, without massive rises in taxation.
When I moved here I was somewhat concerned about healthcare provision. Now I know a little more I am quite comfortable with it. Just like the UK, emergency treatment is free at the point of delivery. In fact most treatment is free at the point of delivery.
You can choose which GP surgery you wish to be registered at, one that operates ‘free’, or if you want a more personal, tailored service you may well need to pay. Non emergency but necessary procedures are probably carried out more quickly than in the UK and again are free of charge. The difference is elective surgery/treatments, these are not freely available to most. You can either take out low level insurance, which you will probably need to pay excesses upon, or have full private healthcare. The trick here is to start it young, as premiums are surcharged the later you leave it. With low level insurance you do get generous allowances on dental, optical and other medical needs to a point. I get free dental check ups and hygienist cover twice a year, and it covers maybe 60% of all dental treatment costs. I also get to have ‘free’ specs up to about £175 every year (I can top up further). I can also claim for a certain amount of massage, acupuncture, and other treatments on an annual basis. This costa about £40 monthly.
The downside? Prescriptions from your GP cost a lot more than the £8ish fee charged in the UK. My monthly asthma preventative treatment costs me about £25, on the other hand a Ventolin inhaler costs about £4 as it is on a list of drugs that are seen as being important to be easily accessible, you can just walk in and buy one. Annoyingly, a tiny tube of Betnovate is also priced at about £25, this figure is important as below that price you cannot claim from your insurance.
Overall, a number of minor annoyances, but overall OK. Those in real need get necessary treatment, those who are savvy do OK. Taxation is higher here to pay for public services, but by bringing in private companies it does introduce competition which eliminates a lot of waste. I am fortunate enough to be able to put money away for a rainy day, but feel comfortable enough that a mix of public and private healthcare will be up to my expectations. As I said earlier, the trick is to get onto full private healthcare before you are 30 years old, many youngsters choose not to.
the Trade bill? seems quite important thing to have at this time.
I'd be happy for a government to grab the NHS and deal with it properly - it is grossly inefficient in some areas at the moment, almost third world is some ways, yet world class in other areas.Political suicide for any party that tries to mess with the NHS for at least a generation - and hopefully much longer
There’s few things worse than expats droning on about how things are better in their adopted home.
What about expats, who spend all day on the media of their former home, looking for tiny little 'PC gone mad' things to get outraged about?
so nothing at all in the bill changes anything relating to drug cost, correct?
The only shock is that more people aren’t aware that large chunks of the NHS are already delivered by for-profit companies. Care provision in the community, care homes, supported living, agency staff, medical supplies, pharmaceuticals and on and on.
Thousands and thousands of companies profit from the NHS.
Only the management of the system, major facilities (hospitals etc.) and most frontline staff are actually part of the NHS proper.
The NHS is incredible, it should remain free at the point of use, its management should remain a public concern and in my opinion all suppliers should be not-for-profit. Much of it is run by and staffed by the best of us.
However, if you’ve seen it up close you know that some aspects of the NHS proper are run like a Victorian institution with awful hierarchies, incredible levels of waste and appallingly our of date management styles.
The same is true of its third party suppliers. Some are great and some are arse****s.
The argument of private or public is as overly simplistic as it is irrelevant because that ship already sailed!
I don’t think that is the argument here. My personal fear is insurance companies And U.S pharma companies getting control of the NHS.
No but then it's not specifically about drug cost. But if you think that pharma companies are lobbying the US government about the UK/US trade deal in order to sell cheaper drugs, I have some magic beans to sell you.
This is just your usual Tory boy status quo cheer-leading that bears no relation to reality.i didnt say that though. i'm only saying this trade bill doesnt alter the current status of drug sales. the argument here is maybe, in future, if other things change, then this thing could happen.
Voting that amendment through would have protected the NHS from control outside the UK. The Tories have voted NOT to protect the NHS from external control and one of the main things on the agenda in any future US trade talks will be US drug companies wanting an overhaul to our drug markets so that they can charge "market" (i.e more expensive) rates. Why are you seemingly pretending everything is just normal and nothing has changed?beorhthelm said:so nothing at all in the bill changes anything relating to drug cost, correct?
This is just your usual Tory boy status quo cheer-leading that bears no relation to reality.
What you actually said is this:
Voting that amendment through would have protected the NHS from control outside the UK. The Tories have voted NOT to protect the NHS from external control and one of the main things on the agenda in any future US trade talks will be US drug companies wanting an overhaul to our drug markets so that they can charge "market" (i.e more expensive) rates. Why are you seemingly pretending everything is just normal and nothing has changed?
So please detail how you think these organisations would get this 'control' ?